Technology
Facebook confirms conflict between Mark Zuckerberg, Apple’s Tim Cook
- Apple CEO Tim Cook and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg have traded insults and barbs over the years.
- The latest example is that Zuckerberg even asked his employees to use Android phones and not Apple phones after Cook criticized Facebook in a televised interview.
- Facebook confirmed the conflict in a public statement and said that Zuckerberg asked his employees to use Android because it’s a more widely used operating system.
Apple CEO Tim Cook and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg might run two giant tech companies just a short drive down the 101 from each other in Silicon Valley, but there’s no love lost between the two moguls.
Now it’s on the record — in an official company statement from Facebook.
In response to a blockbuster New York Times report on how Facebook responded to a series of privacy scandals, Facebook published a lengthy blog post on Thursday morning.
One item was about Cook:
5. Android: Tim Cook has consistently criticized our business model and Mark has been equally clear he disagrees. So there’s been no need to employ anyone else to do this for us. And we’ve long encouraged our employees and executives to use Android because it is the most popular operating system in the world.
This was in response to The Times’ implication that Zuckerberg had ordered his executives to stop using iPhones and use Android instead because he was personally upset with Cook.
Here’s the Times passage:
“We’re not going to traffic in your personal life,” Tim Cook, Apple’s chief executive, said in an MSNBC interview. “Privacy to us is a human right. It’s a civil liberty.” (Mr. Cook’s criticisms infuriated Mr. Zuckerberg, who later ordered his management team to use only Android phones — arguing that the operating system had far more users than Apple’s.)
The enmity between the two technology executives goes back years but heated up earlier this year when Recode’s Kara Swisher asked Cook a question about the Cambridge Analytica incident, in which private Facebook user data was stolen from 50 million users. She asked if the Apple CEO was in Zuckerberg’s place, “What would you do?”
He answered: “What would I do? I wouldn’t be in this situation.”
Zuckerberg later hit back, calling Cook’s criticism “extremely glib.”
In the statement, in which a Facebook representative writes “there’s been no need to employ anyone else to do this for us,” the “anyone else” is referring to Definers Public Affairs, a firm of Republican political operatives that Facebook hired, which the Times report revealed had spread documents with political-style opposition research to reporters.
However, the conflict between Cook and Zuckerberg first arose at least four years ago.
Cook said in an interview with Charlie Rose in 2014 that “when an online service is free, you’re not the customer. You’re the product.”
This apparently got under Zuckerberg’s skin even back then, with a journalist from Time noticing the tension in a profile of the Facebook founder:
“But before that happens Zuckerberg also notes — and it was the only time I saw him display irritation — that Apple CEO Tim Cook wrote something similar in September in a statement spelling out Apple’s privacy policy: ‘When an online service is free, you’re not the customer. You’re the product.’ The shot was probably meant for Google, but Facebook was definitely in the blast radius. ‘A frustration I have is that a lot of people increasingly seem to equate an advertising business model with somehow being out of alignment with your customers,’ Zuckerberg says. ‘I think it’s the most ridiculous concept. What, you think because you’re paying Apple that you’re somehow in alignment with them? If you were in alignment with them, then they’d make their products a lot cheaper!'”
It’s remarkable that this spat between publicly traded giants has spilled out of quips and interviews into a public Facebook crisis PR statement.
Do you work at Apple or Facebook? Got a tip? Contact this reporter via email at [email protected], or Twitter DM at @kifleswing. Secure messaging available upon request. You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.
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